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Lunatic at Large

The Guardian:

Among the discarded projects of the famously fastidious Stanley Kubrick are “lost” movies about Napoleon Bonaparte, the Holocaust and the American civil war. Now, 11 years after his death, a treatment by the legendary film-maker titled Lunatic at Large looks set to make it to the big screen, with Scarlett Johansson and Sam Rockwell attached to star.

3D After Avatar

Avatar was unquestionably a major feat of movie-making. It looked amazing and the 3D effects were stunning. But the trend of 3D movies that had already been mounting and which Avatar cemented means we’re going to start getting overcharged for a lot of subpar 3D (not to mention fake IMAX). Essentially, I feel that 3D rarely enhances the movie-going experience, and at worst rips us off, dulls the color and brightness of the picture, and gives people headaches. As Roger Ebert puts it, “3-D is a distracting, annoying, anti-realistic, juvenile abomination to use as an excuse for higher prices.” I don’t hate 3D, but I think it’s becoming a gimmick that takes away from the craft of making a good film.

Some links:

  1. Entertainment Weekly’s “3-D Movies: What You Need To Know” explains that most 3D movies coming out this year were not filmed in 3D but are instead being converted after the fact. While Avatar was conceived as a 3D picture from the start, these movies, like Clash of the Titans, were not. It’ll be a few years before new releases come out that were shot in 3D from the start. Movies coming out this year will have had the third dimension added manually by effects companies.

  2. Writing for Nikke Finke’s Deadline, Mike Fleming’s article includes quotes from Michael Bay about how bad the experiments he’s done in 3D conversions look:

    “I am trying to be sold, and some companies are still working on the shots I gave them,” Bay said. “Right now, it looks like fake 3D, with layers that are very apparent. You go to the screening room, you are hoping to be thrilled, and you’re thinking, huh, this kind of sucks. People can say whatever they want about my movies, but they are technically precise, and if this isn’t going to be excellent, I don’t want to do it.”

  3. Hollywood Reporter’s “How ‘Avatar’ changed the rules of deliverables” explains that James Cameron’s team wound up making 100 different versions of the film to make sure that it looked great on different combinations of screen and projector type:

    To optimize the experience for different screens sizes, Cameron made the decision to complete the movie in three aspect ratios: Scope (2:39:1), flat (1:85:1) and Imax (1:43:1). “You are not going to see many directors releasing in different aspect ratios, as most pick their canvas and that is their format,” Fox vp postproduction Steve Barnett says.

    Adds [Fox Postproduction President Ted] Gagliano: “Jim wanted the biggest image possible. If you had a theater (where the biggest image possible meant using) movable masking that went up for flat, he preferred the theater run flat. If there was a theater that increased the size of the image by opening it side-to-side to accommodate scope, he wanted to run scope.”

    In some cases, a single multiplex required different versions for different auditorium configurations.

    Creative decisions involving light levels also led to additional versions. 3D projection and glasses cut down the light the viewer sees, so “Avatar” also had separate color grades at different light levels, which are measured in foot lamberts.

    “If we had just sent out one version of the movie, it would have been very dark (in the larger theaters),” Barnett says. “We had a very big flow chart with all of the different steps, so we could send the right media to the right theater.”

That Kubrick level of care about the entire work, from pre-production to distribution, is what separates Avatar from the rest of the herd. Many filmmakers are putting that level of effort into their movies and, from what I’ve read, it’s a shame that the 3D trend may be dulling some of that work.

More on Grant Morrison’s 18 Days

Perspective Studios has published a set of notes by Grant Morrison on his upcoming animated series, 18 Days, which will retell the Mahbharata as a crazy sci-fi anime. Also, Bleeding Cool reports that Dynamite Entertainment will produce a hardcover this spring containing artwork and behind-the-scenes stuff. Comic Book Resources has a few quotes from Morrison about the Dynamite book.

Tarantino quotes, borrows from or pays homage to so many different films that the Academy could hardly list who he has “adapted.” That said, his screenplay is an original, not least with the Tarantinian dialogue. It draws inspiration from earlier works, but sets out anew.
Roger Ebert, on why Quentin Tarantino was nominated for Best Original Screenplay and not Best Adapted Screenplay for Inglourious Basterds. See also Esquire’s heartfelt profile on Ebert and Ebert’s “Nil By Mouth”.
If you want to know the five “real” nominees, match them up with the five Best Director nominations. That gives you “Avatar,” “Hurt Locker,” “Inglourious Basterds,” “Precious” and “Up in the Air.
Roger Ebert (though I’d argue Cameron’s directing of Avatar is better than it is as a film).
A Failed Experiment

Selections from the filmography of James O. Incandenza
Exhibition Dates: Jan 29 - Feb 19th
Opening Reception: Friday, Jan 29th, 6-8 pm
Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday, 10am - 5pm. Videos will be screened continuously during gallery hours.


  In 1996 author David Foster Wallace published his novel
  Infinite Jest and was instantly hailed as one of the
  greatest authors of the 20th century, eventually being
  granted a MacArthur award.  His sprawling and complex novel
  chronicles the lives of the characters surrounding James
  Incandenza- avant-garde filmmaker, mathematician, and
  visionary tennis instructor.  The plot largely revolves
  around the missing master copy of one of Incandenza’s films,
  titled Infinite Jest, a film so entertaining to its viewers
  that they become catatonic, losing all interest in anything
  other than endless viewings of the film.
  
  Included as a footnote in Wallace’s novel is the Complete
  filmography of James O.  Incandenza, a detailed list of over
  70 industrial, documentary, conceptual, advertorial,
  technical, parodic, dramatic non-commercial, and
  non-dramatic commercial works.  The LeRoy Neiman Gallery has
  commissioned artists and filmmakers to re-create seminal
  works from Incandenza’s filmography.


I may need to take the train up to New York for this. (via)

A Failed Experiment

Selections from the filmography of James O. Incandenza
Exhibition Dates: Jan 29 - Feb 19th
Opening Reception: Friday, Jan 29th, 6-8 pm
Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday, 10am - 5pm. Videos will be screened continuously during gallery hours.

In 1996 author David Foster Wallace published his novel Infinite Jest and was instantly hailed as one of the greatest authors of the 20th century, eventually being granted a MacArthur award. His sprawling and complex novel chronicles the lives of the characters surrounding James Incandenza- avant-garde filmmaker, mathematician, and visionary tennis instructor. The plot largely revolves around the missing master copy of one of Incandenza’s films, titled Infinite Jest, a film so entertaining to its viewers that they become catatonic, losing all interest in anything other than endless viewings of the film.

Included as a footnote in Wallace’s novel is the Complete filmography of James O. Incandenza, a detailed list of over 70 industrial, documentary, conceptual, advertorial, technical, parodic, dramatic non-commercial, and non-dramatic commercial works. The LeRoy Neiman Gallery has commissioned artists and filmmakers to re-create seminal works from Incandenza’s filmography.

I may need to take the train up to New York for this. (via)

The impact of Blade Runner is simply going to be overwhelming, both on the public and on creative people—and, I believe, on science fiction as a field.

[…]

I can only say that I did not know that a work of mine or a set of ideas of mine could be escalated into such stunning dimensions. My life and creative work are justified and completed by Blade Runner. Thank you.

Philip K. Dick, just months before his death, in a letter to the production company adapting his short story, “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?”. By the way, the “final cut” of Blade Runner is available on Netflix’s instant streaming.